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Jonathan J. Hogan

University of Pennsylvania

Publishes on Renal Diseases and Glomerulopathies, Chronic Kidney Disease and Diabetes, Vasculitis and related conditions. 26 papers and 812 citations.

26Publications
812Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Identifying Outcomes Important to Patients with Glomerular Disease and Their Caregivers
Simon Carter, Talia Gutman, Charlotte Logeman et al.|Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology|2020
Cited by 97Open Access

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Shared decision making in patients with glomerular disease remains challenging because outcomes important to patients remain largely unknown. We aimed to identify and prioritize outcomes important to patients and caregivers and to describe reasons for their choices. DESIGN: We purposively sampled adult patients with glomerular disease and their caregivers from Australia, Hong Kong, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Participants identified, discussed, and ranked outcomes in focus groups using the nominal group technique; a relative importance score (between zero and one) was calculated. Qualitative data were analyzed thematically. RESULTS: Across 16 focus groups, 134 participants (range, 19-85 years old; 51% women), including 101 patients and 33 caregivers, identified 58 outcomes. The ten highest-ranked outcomes were kidney function (importance score of 0.42), mortality (0.29), need for dialysis or transplant (0.22), life participation (0.18), fatigue (0.17), anxiety (0.13), family impact (0.12), infection and immunity (0.12), ability to work (0.11), and BP (0.11). Three themes explained the reasons for these rankings: constraining day-to-day experience, impaired agency and control over health, and threats to future health and family. CONCLUSIONS: Patients with glomerular disease and their caregivers highly prioritize kidney health and survival, but they also prioritize life participation, fatigue, anxiety, and family impact.

Bortezomib Treatment for Refractory PLA2R-Positive Membranous Nephropathy
Cited by 32Open Access

Introduction: B-cell depletion has been shown to be an effective strategy for the majority of patients with membranous nephropathy (MN), and in PLA2R-positive MN, immunologic remission (improvement or elimination of measurable serum anti-PLA2R antibodies) precedes renal remission. Yet, cases exist of patients who do not achieve immunologic remission despite achieving peripheral B-cell depletion. This has led to the hypothesis that some patients have plasma cells that are responsible for producing anti-PLA2R antibodies. Case Presentation: A 66-year-old man with a past medical history of hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and cerebrovascular disease presented with nephrotic syndrome and was diagnosed with PLA2R-positive MN on kidney biopsy. He was refractory to multiple therapies including tacrolimus, and was resistant to rituximab despite having achieved B-cell depletion. He also did not enter into remission with plasmapharesis and cyclophosphamide. He then achieved immediate immunologic remission after treatment with the proteasome inhibitor bortezomib, which is used as first-line therapy for multiple myeloma. Discussion/Conclusion: This case suggests that considering the source of PLA2R antibody production could lead to individualized and targeted therapies for MN.